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Prosperity Mine's Impacts on the People & Land of the Nemaiah Valley

Last week, we heard that the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) has agreed to conduct an environmental assessment of Taseko Mines Ltd. (TML) proposed “New Prosperity” mine application in Tsilhqot'in territory.

This unfortunate decision is misguided for many reasons. This is the third try by TML to develop this mine, one of the largest gold/copper deposits in British Columbia. It was turned down twice in the recent past because the environmental consequences would be too great. Even by Taseko's own admission during hearings last year, this “tweaked” proposal, then known as Option II, would have even worse environmental consequences than the one rejected by the federal government.

While there are environmental reasons to reject this mine – it is in prime grizzly habitat, will destroy a large rainbow trout population, and threatens large salmon runs that are part of the Fraser River fishery – it is the impact it will have on the local Xeni Gwet'in community in the Nemaiah Valley that I want to focus on.

Picture a “camp” of up to 600 miners placed into a remote First Nations Community that is still largely dependent upon the land for sustenance and identity. This camp will be in place for up to 35 years. 250 Xeni Gwet'in, the People of the Rivers, live in the Nemaiah Valley alongside a small settler community of about fifty people. The latter operate small ranches, run wilderness lodges, fish, hunt and trap, and just like the way of life that prevails here.

Xeni Gwet'in, like indigenous people everywhere, identify with their land. They see themselves as part of it and view any action that destroys any part of it as an assault upon their very being. These days Tsihqot'in culture is recovering from the onslaughts of the colonial era; displacement from places they have relied upon for survival for virtually forever, the reserve system, and residential schools that were designed to destroy their language and culture. That recovery is well advanced in the Nemaiah Valley. Fully 50% of the food consumed comes directly from the land and includes salmon and trout from Nabas.

Consequently they have the lowest diabetes rate in British Columbia. The Tsihlqot'in language, almost lost a few years ago, is now taught in the local school. Peter Brand, Director of the brilliant First Voices programme, says that of all the places he visits across the province the Nemaiah Valley Xeni Gwet'in live closest to their traditional way of life.

An ethic of caring for their land lies deep within the culture.

Chief Marilyn is one of three Xeni Gwet'in co-authors interviewed by Jonaki Bhattacharyya, doctoral candidate at the University of Waterloo. (It’s Who We Are: Locating Cultural Strength in Relationship with the Land, a chapter in a forthcoming book published by UBC Press).

"You need to teach about the importance of caring for water and resources as early as you can! And that’s how the language is learned.

The Tsilhqot’in language is where the deepest strength of who we are and how we’re tied to the land really is.
"

Speaking of the panel hearings into Prosperity Mine specifically specifically Marilyn says:

Our community here, Xeni Gwet’in...we went into the CEAA Panel hearings thinking that we weren’t going to have enough speakers. That was always the fear in all the communities. Because that is a very threatening, intimidating process! Even to us, as leaders! But...our people did just tremendously. It would blow your socks off! Our Elders, our people...just being there, filling the room all those days, and being here those long hours. You couldn’t chase them away if you wanted to. They’d probably chase you away! [laughs] And our youth, the school, all of the kids... The senior class decided to do some submissions. They did a beautiful job. And the intermediate class, they did a play. That was so amazing! They did such a tremendous job. The strength and the voices of everybody in the Tsilhqot’in communities...”

From the same chapter by Bhattacharyya, Xeni Gwet'in Wild Horse Ranger David Setah:

I think in order to give, to find that strength...your kids should also know their past, your past histories… all that about being caretakers, Chilcotin War, all the legends. All that will lead them to who they are. And all that will strengthen them, because they know that they are actually Tsilhqot’ins, and they know their history. And they can go out there being proud because they know they’re connected to that area.

That’s one of my biggest goals is that we’re being caretakers. We’ve done it in the past, and with European contact and things like that, we can still do it. We must still keep in mind that we need to protect our rights. If we keep on in that fashion we’re just building ourselves a stronger nation, and it would be pretty hard for something to come in to affect us. The land is... to remain as a nation and to be recognized as a nation you need the land. We need to take care of the land. That’s what we did a long time ago. And that’s why we’re situated in the areas that we are: to take care of the land.


Culture matters. These voices bring an important message. Indigenous cultures and languages are vital repositories of knowledge and custom that show a thousand ways to be human. Indigenous cultures, and a way of life still strong in the Nemaiah Valley, can teach us all how better to live in this land. Until we learn to show respect for the land, and for them, we will continue an ethic of endless growth that is having cumulative environmental impacts that threaten the very ecosystems that make life on this planet possible.

The people of Xeni are not unsophisticated. They and their settler neighbours and friends were opposed to Prosperity Mine last year. The new model is no better or even worse. They know what 600 miners running loose in their community will do to their way of life, to their land, and to their children. Drugs, alcohol and abuse will be an inevitable component. Mechanized recreation on a vast scale will destroy budding attempts by the community to build a local economy centred around wilderness and cultural tourism. There is plenty of precedent for similar disasters throughout Canada and in third world countries.

It is time to put an end to this colonialist venture if Canada is to maintain even the pretence of being a just nation.


Posted by David Williams Tuesday Nov 22, 2011 14:19
Categories: Environment , Fish Lake | Tags: Aboriginal, British Columbia, environment, First Nations, fish, fund-raising, gold, indigenous, lakes, Prosperity, Taseko, Tsilhqot'in, water, Xeni Gwet'in

1 Comment:
Spherical Earth says:
Posted Friday Nov 25, 2011 07:52

The fight against Developers ,Hydro ,Oil ,Logging ,Mining and any other companies that are changing the land structure in ways that cannot support the communities that need the land to live off of . They say that we can live off the land by offering jobs working for them by developing the land for the future good of the community. But what are they are referring too is a short term proposal . When a community has been living in a sustainable way with the environment for 1000's-10's of thousands of years that has work for the long term ,for that community,that is proved to be environmental sustainable . When a company comes in to live off the land ,they mean to do that ,except its sustainability is short term 0-100 years compared too 1000's-10's of thousands of years of sustainability. When the companies can no longer live off the land they leave and the land takes 100's-1000's years to regenerate enough to once again be used to live off of . This practice of living off the Earth ,from the companies point of view, is changing the planet now, and is not sustainable for the long term of the Local,Provincial,International or the global community.If the future direction of the Human Race is based on short term decisions without long term sustainability. Short term decisions and short term profits for a bottom line right, to live off the land, isn't productive or sustainable for the long term right to live off the land. Such cleaver wordings to change the same meaning ,for the rights to live off the land has different implications to the Local , Provincial and International and Global community. I fear the direction in which the Human race is taking based on the cleaver words to change the same meaning of ,living off the land. And cannot continue without having long term effects on the Human race as a whole !
We really need to consider the decisions we make !
Short term environmental sustainability 0-100 years.(is not working in this time frame)
Long term environmental sustainability 1000-10's of thousands years.
Considering that we have changed the global environmental sustainability in less then 100 years to the point that we have to manage our food stocks because of near to complete extinction, of some species.Do to our management of the way we live off the land, goes to show in that, within that time, its been mismanaged!
In Canada we sell off and lease off our natural resources as if they can regenerate in the short term instead of creating or producing things to sell with long term environmental sustainability in mind. As the First Nations has proved ,they can live with a long term environmental sustainability,as a community,within that area of land,that supports the size of the community, within an area of land, that has the space that it can support the needs of the natural resources available for the needs of the people to live on the land .If a development comes into the space needed by the community that's using the natural resources in an area needed to support the community .It impedes on that communities ability to live and sustain itself .
There for,I would think that would be against the Human Rights of that community. Taseko Mines Ltd. has already hindered the People of the Nemaiah Valley communities rights to live.
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/H-6/page-1.html

PURPOSE OF ACT
Purpose
2. The purpose of this Act is to extend the laws in Canada to give effect, within the purview of matters coming within the legislative authority of Parliament, to the principle that all individuals should have an opportunity equal with other individuals to make for themselves the lives that they are able and wish to have and to have their needs accommodated, consistent with their duties and obligations as members of society, without being hindered in or prevented from doing so by discriminatory practices based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, family status, disability or conviction for an offense for which a pardon has been granted.
Taseko Mines Ltd. has already hindered the People & Land of the Nemaiah Valley community .


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